By AFP |
Coast guard and fishery officials from the Philippines, United States, Vietnam and Indonesia practiced vessel boarding and arrest techniques at a joint maritime law enforcement training, the US embassy in Manila said January 27.
The two-week course on the Philippine southern island of Mindanao comes as part of a regional effort to boost law enforcement cooperation as fears of maritime conflict with China grow.
Frequent clashes or tense standoffs between Philippine and Chinese vessels have taken place in the strategic waterway, as well as recent incidents involving Vietnamese and Indonesian vessels.
"Together, we reaffirm our commitment to ensuring that our maritime sovereignty remains a zone of peace, safety and prosperity for all," Philippine Coast Guard District Commander Rejard V. Marfe said in a statement released by the US embassy.
'Invaluable' training
Marfe called the January 13-24 training "invaluable in ensuring that we are better equipped to address maritime threats," though the statement made no mention of China.
The training covered safe vessel boarding at sea, maritime law, evidence collection and preservation, safety and risk mitigation and arrest techniques, according to the statement.
The Australian Border Force joined the coast guard, customs enforcers and fishery surveillance officials at the training as observers.
China has stepped up naval expansion in recent years as it seeks to extend its reach in the Pacific and challenge a US-led alliance.
In recent months, China has deployed navy and coast guard vessels to bar the Philippines from strategic reefs and islands in the South China Sea.
In October, Hanoi accused Beijing of a "brutal" attack in which it said Chinese forces beaten 10 Vietnamese fishermen with iron bars and robbed them of thousands of dollars' worth of fish and equipment.
And the same month, Indonesia said it expelled a Chinese coast guard ship from contested waters in the South China Sea three times in a week.